2014 elections review: Ohio holds congressional primaries
May 7, 2014
By Ballotpedia's Congressional team
The primary elections of the 2014 election season continued in Ohio on May 6, 2014. Here is a recap of what happened yesterday in the U.S. House.
U.S. House
Sixteen seats are up for grabs in Ohio's 2014 U.S. House elections. Heading into the general election, the Democratic Party holds four of Ohio's 16 congressional seats.
Members of the U.S. House from Ohio -- Partisan Breakdown | |||
---|---|---|---|
Party | As of November 2014 | After the 2014 Election | |
Democratic Party | 4 | 4 | |
Republican Party | 12 | 12 | |
Total | 16 | 16 |
District 1
Incumbent Steve Chabot ran unopposed in the Republican primary. Fred Kundrata defeated Jim Prues for the Democratic nomination.[1]
District 2
Incumbent Brad Wenstrup ran unopposed in the Republican primary. Marek Tyszkiewicz beat out Ronny Harrison Richards, John Arthur Sheil and William Smith in the Democratic primary.[1]
District 3
Incumbent Joyce Beatty ran unopposed in the Democratic primary. John Adams beat out Eric Vennon for the Republican nomination.[1]
District 4
Incumbent Jim Jordan ran unopposed in the Republican primary. No Democratic candidates ran in the primary.[1]
District 5
Incumbent Bob Latta ran unopposed in the Republican primary. Challenger Robert Fry ran unopposed in the Democratic primary.[1]
District 6
Incumbent Bill Johnson ran unopposed in the Republican primary. Jennifer Garrison defeated Greg Howard for the Democratic nomination in the primary.[1]
District 7
Incumbent Bob Gibbs ran unopposed in the Republican primary. No Democratic candidates ran in the primary.[1]
District 8
Incumbent John Boehner defeated J.D. Winteregg, Matthew Ashworth and Eric Gurr in the Republican primary. Tom Poetter beat out Matthew Guyette for the Democratic nomination.[1]
District 9
Incumbent Marcy Kaptur ran unopposed in the Democratic primary. Richard May defeated Robert Horrocks, Jr. in the Republican primary.[1]
District 10
Incumbent Mike Turner defeated John Anderson in the Republican primary. Robert Klepinger beat out Bill Conner for the Democratic nomination.[1]
District 11
Incumbent Marcia Fudge ran unopposed in the Democratic primary, and Mark Zetzer ran unopposed in the Republican primary.[1]
District 12
Incumbent Patrick Tiberi ran unopposed in the Republican primary. David Tibbs ran unopposed for the Democratic nomination, and Bob Hart ran unopposed for the Green Party nomination.[1]
District 13
Incumbent Tim Ryan defeated John Luchansky in the Democratic primary. No Republican candidates ran in the primary.[1]
District 14
Incumbent David Joyce defeated Matt Lynch in the Republican primary. Michael Wager ran unopposed for the Democratic nomination.[1]
District 15
Incumbent Steve Stivers defeated Charles Chope in the Republican primary. Richard Scott Wharton ran unopposed in the Democratic primary.[1]
District 16
Incumbent Jim Renacci ran unopposed in the Republican primary. Pete Crossland defeated James Donenwirth in the Democratic primary.[1]
See also
External links
Footnotes
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